World June 9, 2026 10:15 AM

Mexico City Orders Remote Work and School Closures for World Cup Opening

Federal decree mandates telework and suspends classes on June 11 to ease mobility and safety during opening events

By Avery Klein
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President Claudia Sheinbaum issued a decree requiring federal employees based in Mexico City to work from home on June 11 and suspending educational activities from preschool through university for the same day. The measures are intended to improve urban mobility and road safety as the capital hosts the FIFA World Cup opening match and related events, which are expected to attract large crowds. Essential services will remain on-site and the government encouraged private employers to adopt similar remote arrangements.

Mexico City Orders Remote Work and School Closures for World Cup Opening
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Key Points

  • President Claudia Sheinbaum issued a decree requiring Mexico City-based federal workers to work remotely on June 11 to ease traffic and safety concerns during World Cup opening events - impacts sectors: public administration, transportation.
  • All schools from preschool through university, public and private, will close for the day under the decree - impacts sectors: education, childcare and local services.
  • Federal agencies must maintain in-person staffing only for designated essential services including healthcare, security, critical infrastructure and World Cup operations; the government urged private firms to adopt similar remote-work measures - impacts sectors: healthcare, security, infrastructure, private employers.

Mexico City will implement a one-day shift to remote work for federal employees and suspend classes across the education system on June 11, under a decree signed by President Claudia Sheinbaum. The government says the decisions are intended to support urban mobility and road safety as the capital hosts the FIFA World Cup opening match and associated events that day.

The decree directs federal agencies to activate telework schemes for staff whose duties are based in the capital. Agencies are required to maintain in-person staffing only where operations qualify as essential, with explicit exceptions that include healthcare, security, critical infrastructure and functions tied to World Cup operations.

Under the same directive, schools at all levels - from preschool through university - will be closed for the day, covering both public and private institutions. The government also publicly urged private companies to follow suit and allow employees to work from home for June 11 to reduce the number of vehicles and commuters on the roads.

Officials framed the measures as a logistics and safety response to a day of heightened public activity: opening events connected to the tournament are expected to draw significant numbers of visitors, which could increase traffic pressures and pose risks to road safety.

The decree leaves in place in-person requirements for a defined set of essential services. Those exceptions are intended to ensure continuity of medical care, law enforcement and the operation of critical infrastructure alongside the logistics of staging World Cup activities.


Context and operational notes

  • The main objective stated by the authorities is to improve urban mobility and reduce road-safety risks tied to a major public event.
  • Federal agencies must implement remote work arrangements, though the measure exempts essential services in health, security, critical infrastructure and World Cup operations.
  • Both public and private educational institutions from preschool to university will not hold classes on June 11, and the government has encouraged private-sector adoption of similar telework policies.

While the decree establishes a central policy for federal workers and schools, it relies in part on voluntary compliance by private employers. The effectiveness of the measures in easing congestion and improving road safety will depend on the level of uptake beyond the federal workforce and on the management of exceptions for essential services.

Risks

  • The decree’s intended improvements to urban mobility and road safety could be limited if private employers do not adopt remote-work measures, leaving traffic volumes higher than planned - affecting transportation and commuting patterns.
  • Exceptions for essential services mean some personnel will still commute, which could complicate traffic-management goals and operational continuity during the opening events - affecting healthcare, security and critical infrastructure sectors.

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